Quantized conductance in hybrid split-gate arrays of superconducting quantum point contacts with semiconducting two-dimensional electron systems

Delfanazari, Kaveh; Li, Jiahui; Xiong, Yusheng; Ma, Pengcheng; Puddy, Reuben K.; Yi, Teng; Farrer, Ian; Komori, Sachio; Robinson, Jason W.A.; Serra, Llorenc; Ritchie, David A.; Kelly, Michael J.; Joyce, Hannah J.; Smith, Charles G.
Physical Review Applied 21, 014051 (1-10) (2024)

A quantum point contact (QPC)—a constriction in a semiconducting two-dimensional electron system
with a quantized conductance—is a building block of novel spintronic and topological electronic circuits.
QPCs can also be used as readout electronics, charge sensors, or switches in quantum nanocircuits. A
short and impurity-free constriction with superconducting contacts is a Cooper-pair QPC analogue known
as a superconducting quantum point contact (SQPC). The technological development of such quantum
devices has been prolonged due to the challenges of maintaining their geometrical requirement and near-
unity superconductor-semiconductor interface transparency. Here, we develop advanced nanofabrication,
material and device engineering techniques and report on an innovative realization of nanoscale hybrid
SQPC arrays with split gate technology in semiconducting 2D electron systems. We exploit the special
gate tunability of the quantum wells, and demonstrate the first experimental observation of conductance
quantization in hybrid InGaAs-Nb SQPCs. We observe reproducible quantized conductance at zero mag-
netic fields in multiple quantum nanodevices fabricated in a single chip and systematically investigate the
quantum transport of SQPCs at low and high magnetic fields for their potential applications in quantum
metrology, for extremely accurate voltage standards, and fault-tolerant quantum technologies.


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